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inside the imaginary world of a woman who's been catfishing for 23 years

Author
David Fisher,
Publish Date
Sun, 6 Oct 2024, 10:24am

inside the imaginary world of a woman who's been catfishing for 23 years

Author
David Fisher,
Publish Date
Sun, 6 Oct 2024, 10:24am
  • Natalia Burgess, known as 鈥榯he Facebook predator鈥, resumed catfishing after serving prison time for fraud.
  • Burgess used numerous false identities, including 鈥楲aura Jane West鈥, to deceive and manipulate her victims.
  • Crystal Jenner, whose images Burgess used, reported the ongoing catfishing to police, but no action was taken.

Thirteen years ago, Natalia Burgess was exposed as 鈥渢he Facebook predator鈥 who was targeting teenage boys.

Burgess went to jail after the Herald revealed she was the woman police were seeking for her online contact with dozens of schoolboys.

Now we can reveal that she got out 鈥 and went straight back to catfishing.

In 2011, we didn鈥檛 use the term 鈥渃atfishing鈥. It was a new phrase coined in the United States after a documentary about a woman who used other people鈥檚 photographs to create false identities online.

Here in New Zealand, Burgess has been doing the same for as long as social media existed.

A new podcast 鈥 Chasing Ghosts: The Puppeteer 鈥 tells the story of my investigation into Burgess, 40, as I seek to discover why she has spent more than half her life living a lie.

It鈥檚 an extraordinary period of time, particularly considering the pace at which technology has moved since Burgess initially tried out her masquerade as a 17-year-old using the name 鈥淐hickadee鈥 in UseNet forums.

From there, the investigation traces Burgess through the creation of her first true false identity on Bebo a few years later, all the way through to the present day.

The prompt to return to the investigation was a New Zealander, Crystal Jenner, who is living in Surfers Paradise in Australia.

Jenner wrote to me almost two years ago saying: 鈥淣atalia Burgess has been using my images since 2014 till current to catfish multiple people both men and women. I鈥檝e had four men and one woman contact me in the last four months.鈥

Origins of a catfisher

In the time since, I鈥檝e tracked down several women who Burgess has used as the faces for characters and those who she tricked into believing those characters were real.

Along the way, the investigation revealed the remarkable degree to which Burgess executes her masquerades 鈥 and her motives for doing so.

Some of that has meant revisiting the 2011 investigation, and discovering the wounds created by her deceit then continue to cause pain today.

Back then, Burgess created a cast of characters centred on the false identity of Laura Jane West.

The Herald has learned it was a real-world encounter that led Burgess to the person whose photographs she used for the identity of Laura West.

That encounter happened when a 17-year-old called Natalie was out with work friends and met Natalia at a pub. Natalia bought her a drink, which was a delight because Natalie was under age 鈥 and they had a photograph taken together.

Facebook predator Natalia Burgess who stole identities to create the life she wanted to have. Photo / Dean PurcellFacebook predator Natalia Burgess who stole identities to create the life she wanted to have. Photo / Dean Purcell

After that, Natalia began showing up at Natalie鈥檚 work and bringing gifts until she was told to stay away.

At that point, Laura West was born. Natalia stripped a string of photographs from Natalie鈥檚 page, scanned her friends鈥 pages and also lifted photographs from those pages to expand Laura West鈥檚 social circle.

From time to time, she would use that photograph from the pub to show those she had catfished with the Laura West persona that the real-life Burgess was friends with the pretty teenager.

From that point, Laura West and a coterie of friends set forth on Facebook to form relationships with young men and women 鈥 and boys and girls.

And Burgess didn鈥檛 limit herself to online contact. Her victims told me of long phone conversations with Laura, her (fictitious) sisters 鈥 and even with Laura鈥檚 invented daughter Kaylee, usually aged 3-5.

One victim I spoke to was Sam Baker 鈥 13 when he met Laura鈥檚 sister Rachel online and struck up a relationship. He told me how the other sisters 鈥 all Burgess 鈥 got on the telephone to quiz him as to his intentions towards their sister, counselling him to be a good boyfriend.

This masquerade stretched across the years that followed, reaching a peak in 2010 and 2011 as the real-world consequences of her actions began to be revealed.

A mother鈥檚 pain

Raewyn Ford spoke to me about the death of her son, Peter Russell, in an interview that was gut-wrenching.

Russell, 21, was older than many of those with who Natalia sought romantic entanglement. And he was smitten 鈥 so much so that he proposed to her.

Ford talks about the 鈥済ames鈥 Burgess played in which Laura dumped Russell, then married someone else, then left the country with her new husband and took up with Russell only to dump him again. There was no new husband or overseas travel or any divorce 鈥 all these things were a fiction that put Russell through the wringer.

And then she dumped him again 鈥 and he took his life not long after.

Years of reporting and covering suicide have taught me there is rarely a single reason for someone taking their life.

But Ford鈥檚 loss of her son is an event she lays at the feet of Burgess.

One of the false "Kaylee" profiles created by Natalia Burgess using photos belonging to Crystal Jenner.One of the false "Kaylee" profiles created by Natalia Burgess using photos belonging to Crystal Jenner.

鈥淎ll I knew at that time was Peter was talking to a young, sexy girl on Facebook and that鈥檚 all I knew. He was talking to her a lot. He was talking to me about her and her child and how he was going to marry her.鈥

Ford said the 鈥済ames鈥 that followed 鈥減ut him in a bad place to the point where he couldn鈥檛 deal with life and he went and committed suicide over her鈥.

Burgess wound up charged in relation to her catfishing 鈥 not for lying or for relationships with teenagers or in relation to Russell.

Instead, in 2013 she pleaded guilty on three charges 鈥 one of fraud, one of co-opting a teen鈥檚 Facebook page with his password and humiliating him with his friends, and another of borrowing and not repaying money while using the guise of Laura West.

She was sentenced to two years and two months鈥 imprisonment, with the judge saying of one victim, 鈥渢his young man would have taken his own life as a result of your deceptions against him鈥.

Crystal Jenner, a New Zealander living on the Gold Coast in Australia, has had her social media images used by serial catfisher Natalia Burgess.Crystal Jenner, a New Zealander living on the Gold Coast in Australia, has had her social media images used by serial catfisher Natalia Burgess.

Before she went to prison, I met with Burgess on several occasions to interview her. I could see how she enjoyed success online 鈥 she has a bubbly and engaging personality and holds a bright and light conversation.

For all I found her very likeable, Burgess could never get past the massive issues she has in presenting to the world as herself.

And that hasn鈥檛 changed. When I met with Burgess again for this new investigation, she told me the photographs she had used and personas she created were how she wanted the world to see her.

That鈥檚 probably why Crystal Jenner鈥檚 images were so appealing. Crystal is living 鈥渉er best life鈥, as she calls it, in Surfers Paradise. There, the New Zealander has a cleaning business and a fashion boutique 鈥 she鈥檚 a hard-working and successful woman who her mum, Lucille, quite rightly describes as 鈥渂eautiful鈥.

Huge impact on victim

The impact on Jenner has been huge. Her fashion boutique needs her social media reach to sell new designs, but every time a new image goes up it gets recycled into a new profile.

With those images, Burgess has created a new character known as 鈥淜aylee鈥 鈥 the name she had used for Laura鈥檚 daughter 鈥 and she has set forth across the internet to build relationships, intimate and otherwise, with anyone prepared to believe her false persona is real.

There are some changes. As I investigated I found the age range of people targeted by Burgess had risen. No longer was she talking to boys aged 13-15. I also discovered a real lean towards Australia. That鈥檚 where many of her victims live 鈥 including two who maintained a six-year platonic relationship that they believed was real.

When I asked Natalia about the shift in age and location, she confirmed to me it was a deliberate step to try to avoid attracting police attention again.

And yet, Jenner did get police involved and when a detective did knock on Natalia鈥檚 door, nothing happened. In fact, the detective told Jenner no crime had been committed.

Not so, says criminal barrister Chris Patterson. He explained that police in 2013 used a 鈥渟panner as a screwdriver鈥 because the laws then were clunky.

Not so now, with the Harmful Digital Communications Act providing several pathways to deal with behaviour such as that shown by Burgess.

Crystal Jenner, a New Zealander living on Australia's Gold Coast, has had her social media images used by serial catfisher Natalia Burgess.Crystal Jenner, a New Zealander living on Australia's Gold Coast, has had her social media images used by serial catfisher Natalia Burgess.

鈥淭he act sets out, in essence, that it鈥檚 there to protect people from harm 鈥 caused to them through their online presence,鈥 said Patterson. Anyone listening to Jenner鈥檚 story will know she has suffered immense harm.

The question posed, though, is whether more jail is the answer. Burgess has been honest and frank about her mental health challenges. She assures me she is working hard to address those, and promises she is no longer catfishing.

By my measure, if she stopped when she claimed, it was about the time she found out I was investigating her again.

But has she stopped? She told me in 2011 that she had stopped. She told a judge in 2013 that she had stopped. And she promised Lucille Jenner in 2019 that she had stopped.

For a woman who has lived half her life as a lie, it鈥檚 often hard to know what 鈥 if anything 鈥 is real.

SUICIDE AND DEPRESSION

Where to get help:
鈥 Lifeline: Call 0800 543 354 or text 4357 (HELP) (available 24/7)
鈥 Suicide Crisis Helpline: Call 0508 828 865 (0508 TAUTOKO) (available 24/7)
鈥 Youth services: (06) 3555 906
鈥 Youthline: Call 0800 376 633 or text 234
鈥 What's Up: Call 0800 942 8787 (11am to 11pm) or webchat (11am to 10.30pm)
鈥 Depression helpline: Call 0800 111 757 or text 4202 (available 24/7)
鈥 Helpline: Need to talk? Call or text 1737
鈥 Aoake te R膩 (Bereaved by Suicide Service): Call 0800 000 053
If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

___

Listen to Chasing Ghosts 鈥 The Puppeteer for more on the case of Natalia Burgess, and how the 鈥榙eath鈥 of one of her personas is still haunting people over a decade later.

Follow Chasing Ghosts on iHeartRadioApple PodcastsSpotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Remaining episodes will follow on Tuesdays throughout October.

David Fisher is based in Northland and has worked as a journalist for more than 30 years, winning multiple journalism awards including being twice named Reporter of the Year and being selected as one of a small number of Wolfson Press Fellows to Wolfson College, Cambridge. He joined the Herald in 2004.

The podcast is produced by Ethan Sills, winner of Best Podcast Producer at the Radio and Podcast Awards 2024.

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